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#NoBanNoWall protest draws students, faculty, admins

About 150 students, faculty, and administrators braved flurries and frigid weather Wednesday afternoon to protest President Donald Trump’s executive order banning immigration from seven Muslim-majority countries, as well as his plan to build a wall along the Mexican border.

Holding a banner that read “#NoBanNoWall” in English, Spanish, Somali, Farsi, and Arabic, student organizers took turns denouncing the ban and the proposed wall, leading the assembled crowds in chants of “No hate, no fear, immigrants are welcome here” as Department of Public Safety officers looked on.

Mustapha Ibrahim, a freshman from Somalia, held a sign that read “I Just Got Banned!” Wiping tears from his eyes as he spoke to the crowd, Ibrahim said to cheers that he was “proud to be Somalian, […] and proud to be an immigrant.”

“I want to bring what makes America great back home,” he said, adding that he may now be prevented from doing so.

Sophomore Haydi Torres shared her family’s immigrant story, announcing that she was “undocumented and unafraid.”

Torres, who came to the U.S. from Honduras when she was 16, is a part of UR DREAMers, a group on campus that seeks to educate other students on the realities of undocumented life and immigration law.

Anis Kallel, a senior from Tunisia, walked up the stairs outside Wilson Commons as one of several speakers from the crowd.

“My country, Tunisia, isn’t yet on the list, but this ban definitely made me consider all possible outcomes,” he said during a later interview. “I constantly check the news and expect the worst.”

Though he says he “feels targeted” by the executive order, Kallel thinks that it’s “refreshing to see people united behind a good cause and willing to fight for what’s right.”

Following a move into Hirst Lounge to continue the rally, the crowd walked through Wallis Hall, where, according to Melissa Holloway, an organizer and Take 5 student, “staff members were actually chanting with us and taking videos of us.”

Though “there are currently no plans for future rallies,” Holloway, said, “we are working on putting together UndocuAlly trainings and events of the like” (referring to an educational program that teaches students how to advocate for undocumented classmates).

The rally finished inside the Interfaith Chapel, where a University panel fielded questions from students, faculty, and Rochester residents on how the ban will affect the campus international community.

The lab has also been home to a number of Ph.D. students, not only from UR, but from universities worldwide. Students have gotten the opportunity to work at the “OMEGA” facility with state-of-the-art lasers, one being one of the most powerful high-energy lasers in the world.

His narrative focused on the political, historical, and imaginative constraints on these local leaders, which he used in explaining how a legal system with ample black leadership could still lead to the mass incarceration of African-Americans.